3 Mo. App. 503 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1877
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action to recover damages for injuries received by the plaintiff, a minor, by being thrown, as he alleged, from a wagon through the negligence of an agent of defendant, who was driving one of its transfer-wagons. The collision took place on Green Street in the city of St. Louis,
The following were given as instructions on behalf of the plaintiff:
“2. If the jury believe and find from the evidence that the injury complained of in plaintiff’s petition was caused by gross and wanton recklessness or carelessness of the defendant, its servant or employee, in driving one of defendant’s teams, as is alleged in the petition, and without any fault on the part of the plaintiff, then they will find a verdict for the plaintiff, and, in addition to such sum as will compensate for the injury sustained, may give exemplary damages in such sum as the jury believe from the evidence the circumstances of the injury will warrant, in all not to exceed the sum of five thousand dollars.”
The court gave the following instructions on behalf of the defendant :
“1. If the jury find from the evidence that the carelessness, negligence, or imprudence of the plaintiff contributed directly to the injury, or that the driver of the transfer-wagon willfully caused the injury, not to promote the interests of his employers, nor within the scope of his employment, but out of malice, ill-will, or anger, and for purposes of his own solely, then the jury will find for defendant.
“2. If the jury find from the evidence that the carelessness, negligence, or imprudence of the plaintiff contributed
The defendant asked and the court refused instructions to the effect that, if the jury found for the plaintiff, the damages could only be such as would compensate for loss of time, money expended, and actual suffering caused by the injuries ; and that the jury could not give vindictive or exemplary damages. The plaintiff had a verdict for $1,772.
The appellant contends that there was error in giving the first instruction for the respondent, as it refers to the jury the question what the issues are. If this were so, it would render the instruction bad, as it is the duty of the court to sift the pleadings and state what the issues are. But it is evident that in the present case the jury are not referred to the pleadings to find the issues. The reference, evidently made for the purpose of shortening the instruction, is to matters of description which are parts of the narrative, and not to the essential questions in the case, which are apparent from the instructions. As a matter of practice, however, it is better, in instructions, to avoid references to the pleadings, as the line is sometimes narrow which separates mere matters of description from issuable facts.
The appellant complains that no definition of negligence is given, and that the jury are left to find what it means. But the word “ negligence ” is not a merely technical term. It is an English word of well-known meaning, and so used in the instruction, and the fact that under certain circumstances courts of law have to decide what constitutes negligence does not destroy the popular character of the word. If the appellant wished any particular declaration of law pertaining to the subject of negligence, he should have asked it.
The objection to the second instruction is well founded. The evidence in the case was not such as to call for exemplary damages, or instructions in regard to such dam
The fact that the defendant did not discharge its driver after learning of the accident had no tendency to prove a ratification by defendant of his act. To hold the defendant liable for vindictive damages by virtue of a ratification, the plaintiff must at least prove some affirmative act. Mere negation, or absence of action, cannot operate as a ratification in any such case as the present. The fallacy lies in assuming that there was some obligation on the defendant to act, and to conclude itself by its action. If it discharged the driver on account of the accident, this would be taken as evidence of its liability; else, it would be argued, why discharge him? If, on the contrary, there is no discharge, a ratification is inferred. This would be to reduce parties to a dilemma to which the law does not drive them. The law can make no distinction between cases which are plain and those which are not plain. An investigation may completely alter the aspect of the case ; and it is the right of a party charged to have the investigation made under the safeguards provided by law. The defendant was entitled to stand on its legal rights, and the plaintiff to stand on his legal remedies. The foreman of the company had no personal knowledge of the accident, and neither by word nor deed sanctioned any wrong-doing. It is true, as said in Perkins v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas R. R. Co., 55 Mo. 214, that slight acts of ratification may be sufficient; but the mere omission to act, when action might compromise the
There was no evidence tending to prove that the injury was willful on the part of the driver of defendant, or that he did the act out of malice, ill-will, or anger, and for purposes of his own, and this part of defendant’s instruction should not have been given.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.